Jarrod Lyle goes through the repercussions of his second diagnosis of leukemia. He and Dr. Jeff Szer explain the his journey to hearing the words "cancer free." Go to GolfChannel.com/lyle for the complete special report.

to look in the various registries around the world for a matched unrelated donor . Currently, there were about 14.7 million people around the world who had volunteered to donate for Jarrod. None of those was a match for him. So our third-line option here is to use cordblood to raise stem cells that had been donated in the course of delivering newborn babies around the world. -Oh, I didn't know anything about cordblood or anything like that. I knew a little bit about because we saved Lusi's cordblood , thinking that might be able to help me. But hers wouldn't work it was only 50 percent me. They needed a better match. -Now, one of the problems of cord blood transplantation in adults is that cordblood , you know, to about--by their nature, there is more--Jarrod is far from a small boy and so what we developed around the world is what we call double cord blood transplantation , where we find two units, usually from different banks, sometimes from the same bank, that combined still total will make our requirement for a cell dose for a personally given white. -I ended up finding two cordblood donors. One was from Jeremy, one was from the USA. And they said that this is the next best thing for you,

a lot with my golf clubs and play nine holes. -I started playinggolf from a very young age and just enjoyed being out there. -As long as he had a golf stick in his hand, he was right. -I thought I had the flu, and I figured, you know, I was trying really hard at school to get my work done and also playinggolf and sort of traveling with golf a little bit as well. So I just figured I was just getting run down and

that, he was starting, "I'm not gonna let it beat me. I'm playinggolf with you soon." -Probably the biggest thing that got me going the first time around was my golf because that's all I ever wanted to do, was become a golfer. -I first met Jarrod at the hospital, at the Royal Children's Hospital . He was seventeen years of age. The CEO of the Challenge Cancer Support at--Dave Rogers, he said to me, he said, "Look,

wanted to do was play golf. So I just kept thinking about playinggolf and I was lucky that through that treatment, I was well enough in between different stages of chemotherapy that I could go out and actually play golf. -From that moment, I've just really tried to help him. You know, I knew that he wanted to be a professional golfer , and he said he has always wanted to play golf with me. And we got him out, and we started playing some

Jarrod Lyle's family and friends talk about what an inspiration Jarrod is and what his story has done for other people. Jarrod explains that what happened to him was a blessing and what he's gained. Go to GolfChannel.com/lyle for the complete special report.

move from what we had considered normal, which was travelling on the PGAtour and we haven't done that yet. -I know that's what he wants. I know that's what his family wants, is to come back to-- come back and live in America and get back to a normal lifestyle. -I think Jarrod will have a [unk] normal, if not normal life if he can say that someone was a professional golfer has a sort of normal life. Knowing Jarrod, I think he's gonna try his hardest to keep the normal professional side of

afternoon, 5 years ago you've been thinking of ever standing over a golf ball again. John, I know you're pretty emotional as well and, you know, to play alongside two of the greats of the Australian game in Nick O'Hern and CraigParry and for your young fellow to hole these set off and be right there when the guns were firing on the back